Showing posts with label memento. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memento. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2016

cory strand - memento (totality).



Cory Strand - Memento (Totality)

1:53:28

97.66 MB + 97.66 MB + 9.86 MB

1. Memento (Totality)




ask and ye shall receive.

cory strand's "totality" reinterpretation of memento is just as dark, labyrinthine, and despairing as the film itself.

and it gives me the urge to remix the video to go along with the destructive audio...maybe someday.

I don't know how or why copies are still available, but grab one now.

it's an essential companion to what is still, in my opinion, christopher nolan's crowning achievement.

cory's also been uploading a lot of material to bandcamp lately, so grab some of that stuff, too.

finally, sorry for the split...download all three .rar files and then unpack.




(buy a copy from altar of waste)


(the world doesn't just)

(disappear when you)

(close your eyes, does it?)





Thursday, April 28, 2016

cory strand - memento: a reinterpretation.



Cory Strand - Memento: A Reinterpretation

7:51:32

188.05 MB + 168.56 MB + 187.13 MB + 164.83 MB

1. Part One
2. Part Two
3. Part Three
4. Part Four
5. Part Five
6. Part Six
7. Part Seven
8. Part Eight
9. Part Nine
10. Part Ten
11. Coda One
12. Coda Two




my love for memento is no secret, nor is my love for cory strand's unique reinterpretations of the scores and audio tracks from classic films.

this twelve-disc set, released on strand's altar of waste, perfectly captures the myriad moods put forth by what is, in my opinion, christopher nolan's crowning achievement...and easily one of the best films of the last twenty years.

the sounds and artwork coalesce to form the perfect companion to the film.

it's slow and subtle, gradually seeping into your subconscious and distorting your perception until you're questioning everything around you...

I'd love to see cory do a "totality" version of memento - with the entire audio track turned into destructive wall noise - which would serve as an excellent counterpoint to the gloomy ambience here.

while this one's a little pricey, don't hesitate - fans of the film will love this release, and cory's put the same amount of time, effort, and love into this package that he puts into all of his releases...I don't know how he does it, but I'm glad we get to reap the benefits.




(buy a copy from altar of waste.)


(fact one.)

(fact two.)

(fact three.)

(fact four.)





Tuesday, May 21, 2013

formative films - memento.




like most formative experiences, I remember the first time I saw memento like the back of my hand. it was late summer/early fall of 2001, I was a senior in high school, and after a lifetime of simply loving and being entertained by movies, I was finally starting to look at them as works of art. I had recently become friends with several people who took film incredibly seriously, some of whom even had career aspirations in the field, and memento was heavily recommended. my family and I traveled to the abomination known as new roc city. they went to see one film while I went to see memento, and I'm pretty sure I was the only one in the theater.

after those two hours were up, I left the theater and rejoined my family outside, and my perception of what a film could be and how it could function was forever changed.

as with all of the "formative film" posts to come, I will not be providing a detailed plot summary, nor will I make any attempt to avoid spoilers. these films are all at least ten years old, and if you haven't seen them by now, well, I feel sorry for you.


while the plot device that drives the film forward could be viewed as a mere gimmick, it's really anything but. christopher nolan's narrative structure and character development both rely on it to constantly shift the viewer's expectations moment to moment.

but even after all of the narrative and structural tricks are pushed aside, we're stil left with one astoundingly creative and, I'd argue, revolutionary choice: the protagonist and the antagonist are the same person.

nolan's choice to give his main character no ability to form long-term memories lets him play with the very notion inherent to all films that there is a good force fighting against an evil force. throughout the entire film, leonard shelby believes he is doing good by pursuing a force that he believes to be evil only for the final sequence to reveal that he's been chasing himself all along.


leonard is the man who (albeit accidentally) murdered his own wife, leonard is the one who gives himself an endless series of mysteries to solve, and nolan's choices in crafting this character are what truly make the film so memorable (no pun intended). this is a man so complex, so conflicted, that he can't even understand himself, nor does he want. he seeks nothing but the gratification of what he believes his purpose in life to be and can't (or won't) comprehend the repercussions.

in terms of production, memento is startlingly simple, almost deceptively so. there are only three significant characters and a handful of locations which, in terms of production, is about as bare-bones as a narrative feature can be. but the way those characters are slowly revealed, the way they gradually change thanks to the narrative's structure, that's nothing less than absolute mastery of the craft of storytelling.


leonard's transition from flawed hero to disturbed murderer, natalie's move from wounded lover to vengeful manipulator, teddy's change from potential suspect to tragic enabler, it's all mind-blowingly complex but presented with such a confident grace that we never once question anything.

ultimately, the film is about the lies we tell ourselves in order to survive each and every day. it's about the quest for something that gives us purpose, and about how we desperately fool ourselves into believing our own rhetoric. but at the end of the day, we're our own worst enemies. we're the ones who determine the paths we choose and whether or not our actions keep us on those paths.


and if it comes down to choosing to see the truth of who we are or retreating into our own cycle of lies, we run scared back into our own heads. because there, just like leonard, we are the heros of our own stories. we are the ones avenging others, helping the ones we love, triumphing over the hardships of life.

coming face to face with those truths can indeed be terrifying, but based on the conclusion of the film, I'd say nolan's ultimate message is that refusing to change and enacting those same destructive, deceptive cycles over and over again is far more terrifying from a philosophical standpoint than any acknowledgment of truth ever could be.


only by acknowledging the truth about ourselves can we move forward, otherwise we, just like leonard, will be trapped in a self-imposed loop that may help us feel heroic. in reality, however, we're just destroying ourselves and those around us through hollow, selfish actions.

so take a look at your own life. even if you don't like what you see, you'll be better off for coming face to face with the truth than you could ever be living inside of your own comforting delusions.



(stream memento on netflix.)


(buy a copy of the special edition dvd on amazon.)